Chasing Ice

Oscar Nominee! Best Original Song.

“Aesthetics and eco-advocacy are a perfect match in Chasing Ice, a documentary so stuffed with eye-soothing images one prays it can seduce a climate-change skeptic or two.
“Nature photographer James Balog spent years photographing endangered animals for clients like National Geographic before discovering what looks to be his life's work. After shooting an important article on glaciers, he soon came to think of that as "a scouting mission" for a much larger project: Gathering a team of glacier researchers and other kinds of experts, he launched the Extreme Ice Survey, setting up dozens of cameras in Greenland, Iceland, Alaska and Montana that would automatically photograph ice formations throughout the year, providing visceral evidence of glaciers' astonishing shrinkage rate.
“Following the team through the first stage of their campaign, filmmaker Jeff Orlowski watches as impressive coordination -- custom-made electronics to control cameras, elaborate rigging to anchor and protect them from terrible weather -- fails in the field. But Balog, who refuses to quit even when his own body fails, retools the gear and eventually gathers stunning evidence. We watch as the photographer -- who 20 years ago was dubious about global warming -- gives presentations in which time-lapse movies illustrate three to four years' worth of shocking glacial retreat. The before-and-after images are viscerally compelling, and Orlowski backs them up by interviewing researchers whose hard data proves we're not just seeing the Earth's normal atmospheric cycles.
“Though the film's arguments are convincing, Chasing Ice conveys the visual richness of Balog's work, where an astounding variety of shape, color, and translucency makes ice seem like a worthy object for a career, even if its disappearance weren't so closely linked to humanity's fate.” - John DeFore, Hollywood Reporter